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Elite Won't Replace Premium or Core Skus

Posted by Zonk on Wed Mar 28, 2007 02:37 PM
from the get-thee-behind-me dept.
As the day has progressed, more information about the 'Elite' has become available. GamesIndustry.biz is reporting that the other two 360 skus will still be available. The Elite is not replacing either of them. Interestingly, there's no word on a price drop for them either. Major Nelson's most recent podcast has several interviews and details about the new offering, which you may find informative. There's more analysis available, if you find that interesting: CVG wonders aloud who is going to buy this thing, while a Wedbush Morgan analyst mentioned to GamesIndustry.biz that he thinks this validates the PS3 strategy. "'It appears to me that Microsoft sees the writing on the wall - Blu-ray is going to win the format wars ... Ultimately, Microsoft will likely offer a Blu-ray drive with the 360 Elite, and I think consumers will be able to select based solely upon other drivers.' Pachter also believes that although the Xbox 360 Elite will register with early adopters of hi-def content, the current 20GB model will still be sufficient for many consumers."

Related Stories

[+] Sony Readying for Larger HDD PS3 ? 117 comments
Bloomberg reports that Sony may be considering a new SKU for the PS3 with a larger hard drive. This follows closely on the heels of the announcement of the Xbox 360 Elite and the 120 gig Xbox HD. No other details are provided, in a story primarily about news of increased profits as PS3 sales continue to rise. " Chief Executive Officer Howard Stringer targets an operating profit margin of 5 percent by March 2008, about double the current margin. Tokyo-based Sony confirmed today that it will only sell a more expensive version of its PlayStation 3 game console in North America, a strategy it adopted for the European market to bolster margins. 'Profit margin will probably exceed 5 percent if Sony doesn't lower the price of PlayStation 3,' Hitoshi Kuriyama, an analyst at Merrill Lynch & Co. wrote in a report dated yesterday. He rates the stock a buy. Shares of Sony gained 28 percent this year, compared with a 0.8 percent advance in the Nikkei 225 Stock Average."
[+] Xbox 360 Price Cut Dismissed 36 comments
Next Generation is reporting that, despite comments from director of Xbox product management David Hufford saying that a console's 'sweet spot' is $199, Microsoft has no plans to drop the price any time soon. His comments came from a Bloomberg article we discussed last week. "Some are getting really spun up about the Bloomberg story and inaccurately reading tea leaves that don't exist. I spoke to Bloomberg nearly two months ago and we were talking about NPD data that had just been released, and chatting generally about price points of consoles in the market. The comment, which is accurately reported, unfortunately has now been taken way out of context and being reported as if I am signaling a price drop ... With Xbox 360s selling well at their current price point, Elites selling out at $479, and an insanely great portfolio of games in the market, there's no reason to announce any kind of price drop anytime soon."
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  • If I don't care about HDMI... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by AbsoluteXyro (1048620) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @02:41PM (#18519385)
    What is to stop me from buying a Core 360 and a 120GB HDD? If you don't care about HDMI, where's the value in the Elite SKU?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 28 2007, @02:46PM (#18519445)
    Is everyone suddenly a merchandiser or something? I'll replace your sku.
  • I Honestly Can't Believe This Is Real (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 28 2007, @02:47PM (#18519447)
    470 dollars for the 360 itself
    100 dollars for WiFi
    200 dollars for the HD-DVD addon
    50 dollars a year to play games online - 250 dollars over five years

    There are no hardware changes other than the addition of the HDMI digital connection - so all of the existing hardware defects will exist with this model. The move to 65nm has been delayed to later this year. So you sure as hell better pay for an extended warranty.

    And that is not including all the little things like chargers that Microsoft is nickel and diming Xbox owners with.

    You are looking at spending ~820-1020 on this system over five years. WTF are they smoking up in Redmond?

  • PS3 Advantage (Score:5, Insightful)

    by tb3 (313150) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @02:51PM (#18519493)
    (http://lucernesys.com/)
    But the PS3 advantage (if they can establish a price point and sell enough of the damn things) is that the Blu-Ray drive is standard. That means that the larger capacity can be used for game data. No matter what optional drives Microsoft ships for the 360, game designers will always be hobbled by the constraint of the DVD as the lowest common denominator.
    If the PS3 survives its games will end up looking a lot more impressive than 360 games of the same vintage.
    • Re:PS3 Advantage by whodunnit (Score:1) Wednesday March 28 2007, @03:05PM
    • Re:PS3 Advantage (Score:5, Informative)

      by kinglink (195330) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @03:11PM (#18519749)
      I work in a company that does open world games (and good ones actually). I have to tell you the "hobbling" isn't true. The 512 megs of ram that we have on the system is a bigger issue than anything that has to do with the media we are working on.

      Blu-ray sounds great but what do you need to fill it with. As it is the amount of money we pay to get the game shipped now is a lot. Cost is what's stopping us from making bigger or more diverse games, rather then size of the media again.

      The people who are hurt the most by this are the JRPG companies who just explode with FMVs, blue dragon is a 3 dvd game, other then them I've heard no complaints about the size of the media. Hell, The only reasons they are filling up Blu-rays are they are using "stupid" tricks like uncompressed audio for Metal gear solid. I just have a simple question. Now that both systems are out, and we already have seen that the 360's dvd has a higher read speed then the ps3's blu-ray device (overall blu-ray SHOULD be faster, but in these two actual system the 360's drive is faster). Why are you using larger files sizes rather then using the "extra" power of the ps3 to uncompress these files? The simple answer is no, the ps3 isn't that powerful (Insomniac today claims you have 8 cores? funny we only have access to 6 cores).

      In the end blu-ray isn't going to be the answer. Sony's system has some good marks, but blu-ray isn't necessary, and the Cell processor is doing more to hurt the developer than it is helping it.

      If anything the 360 developer's biggest problem has nothing to do with DVDs, it's due to the fact that the Hard drive is non standard and we can't guarantee using that for caching, but that's a relatively minor complaint in the long run.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:PS3 Advantage by dank zappingly (Score:1) Wednesday March 28 2007, @11:08PM
    • Re:PS3 Advantage by toolie (Score:3) Wednesday March 28 2007, @03:06PM
    • Re:PS3 Advantage (Score:5, Interesting)

      by 644bd346996 (1012333) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @03:57PM (#18520391)

      If the PS3 survives its games will end up looking a lot more impressive than 360 games of the same vintage.
      Now that is funny.
      The PS3 just had the greatest console launch in history in Europe.
      No, the PS3 just had the best European launch of a console. That is not the same as "the best launch in history" with an implied comma and then "in Europe."

      The PS3 is selling at a faster rate in the US.
      That statement is meaningless. Faster than what? Faster than in Europe or Japan? Faster than the Wii?

      People are asking who do they have to kill to get into the Home beta.
      Only people at least as demented as you. And presumably as young or younger than you.

      Every single developer who supported the 115+ million selling PS2 is making games for the PS3.
      That is not saying much. What matters is how many games they are making for the PS3, and how many are exclusive to the PS3, as compared with the development scene for the 360 and to a lesser extent, the Wii.

      Sony's first party developer lineup is stronger than both Nintendo and Microsoft combined - there are over 150 first party games alone in development.
      Finally, some good (though uncited) information. But still, I have to wonder how many of those games will make it to the market, and how many are at all original. And you failed to provide any data about Microsoft and Nintendo to back up your claim that the are not being as prolific game developers.

      Even PC developers are looking to the PS3 for their games as the pc game market continues to die.
      That sure seems to be a totally baseless claim. In fact, I think it is probably totally wrong. First of all, not many developers would go through the trouble of porting a game from the PS3 to a platform that is dying faster. Second, the PC gaming market is not dying. Third, the portion of the PC gaming market that is composed of PS3 ports is, and always will be, very small.

      The PS3 has turned out to be the most reliable console ever made.
      By what measure? Sure, it seems to have gotten much less press about it's problems than the 360, but that doesn't make it the gold standard. Certainly the hardware can't be all that reliable, given the extreme complexity compared to the other consoles on the market. For example, the Cell processor in the PS3 has an SPU disabled because they can't produce the whole processor at mature yields. And the PS3 has not been on the market long enough to compare with, say, the GameCube. Also, with the exception of the wrist strap issue arising from improper but foreseeable usage, I expect the Wii to be the most reliable of the consoles, given the simplicity of its hardware and the fact that it is mostly already proven.

      Yeah, if the PS3 'survives'...
      The PS3 is by no means destined to come out on top or even in second. No games for any of the three platforms are out yet that were developed after feedback from the launch titles. And they still have been on the market for less than a year. For a product with an expected lifetime of at least five years, this is way too early to be making judgments with that level of confidence.

      Oh wait. You are referring to how Sony had to divert manufacturing capacity in last month from the US to Europe for the launch and there were low NPD numbers...
      It has been well documented that the PS3 has been in excess supply in many of the biggest markets in the US. With or without the European launch, Sony needed to divert production capacity away from the US. And I have yet to see any evidence that that diversion has caused any shortages in the US.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:PS3 Advantage by Neo_piper (Score:1) Wednesday March 28 2007, @04:45PM
    • Re:PS3 Advantage by valathax (Score:1) Wednesday March 28 2007, @05:22PM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:PS3 Advantage by yoyhed (Score:2) Wednesday March 28 2007, @05:45PM
    • Re:PS3 Advantage by LKM (Score:2) Thursday March 29 2007, @05:13AM
    • 2 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • Disappointed (Score:3, Interesting)

    by MBraynard (653724) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @02:52PM (#18519509)
    (Last Journal: Tuesday July 31, @12:20AM)
    Disappointed that this is a worse value than the PS3. I have a 360. I gave one to my brother and to my sister; I was thinking about handing mine off to my mom and getting the Elite, but it almost isn't worth it.

    I guess I'm just repeating the normal mantra: needs the HD-DVD built in and Wireless built in. Right now it's 480+200+100. I find the price of the little wireless device most eggregious even now and wonder why there are not third party devices out there that can do the wireless.

  • Agreed! (Score:1)

    by thecalster (1081075) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @02:54PM (#18519541)
    I agree with the comment that was quoted. Microsoft would have done a lot better making this Elite edition use either blu-ray or use the HD Drive. Allow it to play HDdvds or Blu-rays would have been reason to buying the elite edition. Even though they do have the HD drive you can install, but not everyone wants to go to the hastle to install extra stuff.
  • Why? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by MeanderingMind (884641) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @02:55PM (#18519543)
    (http://matoushin.blogspot.com/ | Last Journal: Tuesday May 24 2005, @09:28AM)
    Why did Microsoft do this?

    Releasing a console with built-in HD-DVD would be interesting. Though there are potential reasons to avoid this.

    1) Price being too close to the PS3, in some ways validating it.
    2) No guarantee of success and thus subsidizing of the HD-DVD drive.

    But that said, decided not to include an HD-DVD drive pratically makes the whole thing a wash. Without the HD-DVD drive, all we have is a more expensive premium console that has a larger hard drive, HDMI hookups, and is black.

    Without any truly tangible benefit, it shrinks the extremely important price difference between the consoles. My points 1 and 2 above apply in almost the exact same way.

    1) Price too close the the PS3, in some ways validating it.
    2) Lack of backing of HD-DVD can be seen as implying a lack of confidence in the medium.

    The whole thing seems ill-conceived. If they didn't want to release a console with an built-in HD-DVD drive, they could have simply upgraded live and announced a new, larger hard drive alone and perhaps a black case mod for the first 1000 buyers. A whole new SKU for this is a ridiculous waste of resources, while at the same time killing several key talking points for the 360.
    • Re:Why? by MooseMuffin (Score:2) Wednesday March 28 2007, @03:20PM
    • Re:Why? by LoudMusic (Score:2) Wednesday March 28 2007, @03:46PM
      • Re:Why? by iainl (Score:1) Thursday March 29 2007, @04:44AM
    • Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Itchyeyes (908311) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @04:13PM (#18520563)
      Actually the why is pretty simple.

      From an article I originally posted here:http://vgecon.blogspot.com/2007/03/purpose-of -xbox-360-elite.html [blogspot.com].

      The answer is that the Xbox 360 Elite is aimed at people who are willing to pay $479 for an Xbox 360. That may seem a little too simplistic, so I'll explain. One basic rule of economics is that a product's price is partially determined by how much the consumer values it. However, every individual has their own concept of what the product is worth. Ideally a manufacturer would want to sell to every customer at exactly what they're willing to pay, as long as it's higher than the cost of producing the product. Unfortunately this is just not practical in the real world, especially with a large volume product. Just because someone is willing to pay a certain amount doesn't mean that they won't pay less if they can. People would find out that you're selling the product to others for less and demand that price even if they would have been willing to pay more.

      There are two alternatives to this. First, you could set a single price; but this is a gamble. If you price too high you will lose sales to people who valued the product less. If you price too low, you lose profit margins from people who would have been willing to pay more. The other alternative is to still set your product at multiple price points but vary each version slightly. An excellent example of a company that uses this tactic is Starbucks. A regular coffee at Starbucks is only around $1.60; but a double foam mocha latte... whatever can cost you upwards of $4.00. In truth, both products cost Starbucks approximately the same amount of money to make. Price sensitive customers will choose the regular coffee, and people who are willing to pay more may spring for the more extravagant drink.

      This is what Microsoft is doing with the Xbox 360. Sure, the Premium costs Microsoft more to make than the Core, and the Elite costs them more then the Premium; but it's less than most people think. Microsoft may still be losing money on the Core, but they're probably breaking even on the Premium at this point. At $479, the Elite might even turn a small profit.

      Some people have pointed out that the new price tag erases Microsoft's price advantage over the $500 PS3. From a marketing perspective, it may seem that way. From an economics perspective though, things are still very different. The key point is that Microsoft is going to be ready for a price cut far sooner than Sony will be. Before the Elite, a price cut would have meant that they would have to sacrifice any profits from people who were still willing to pay top dollar for a system. A new high end model allows them to maintain their position in the $400 range, while extending their market by dropping the low end of their price range.

      I am no marketing expert, so I can't really say what the effects will be there. Economically though, this is a smart move by Microsoft.
      [ Parent ]
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:Why? by Jeff DeMaagd (Score:2) Wednesday March 28 2007, @10:51PM
    • Re:Why? by GWBasic (Score:2) Thursday March 29 2007, @01:51PM
    • Re:Why? by MeanderingMind (Score:3) Wednesday March 28 2007, @03:24PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Blu-Ray (Score:5, Insightful)

    by *weasel (174362) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @02:55PM (#18519547)

    It appears to me that Microsoft sees the writing on the wall - Blu-ray is going to win the format wars

    It appears to me that Microsoft is acknowledging the format wars are stillborn. Their support for HD-DVD was just about defusing the PS3 anyway, not defeating Blu-Ray. MS already has their license fees secured, regardless of how the little-plastic disc formats fare.

    The media victory Microsoft is after, is digital delivery.
    • Re:Blu-Ray by Chokolad (Score:2) Wednesday March 28 2007, @07:28PM
    • 3 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • Prices (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Applekid (993327) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @03:04PM (#18519643)
    Prices are funny. Microsoft is obviously milking every dime they can get out of gamers who buy a system before they drop the prices. While there is no sign of that happening, you can pretty much count on any PS3 price drop to be matched by a 360 price drop of equal or greater value.

    That "validation" of the PS3 strategy by way of price is a bit misleading, though. Sony equates the PS3 to fine equipment whose price indicates its value. But it's a genuinely expensive device to make. What the PS3 price points have proven to the people who figure out the prices of consoles is that consoles have been too cheap and the market could sustain them at higher prices than previously thought.

    Other very expensive consoles have gone down in flames for home use... but the median price for the majority of consoles at the market at any given time has been a $200 - $250 sweet spot. The only thing that Microsoft and Sony have done is show that the sweet spot can be coaxed higher.

    What I don't understand is why Microsoft isn't playing a price war yet. They've got the biggest userbase for this generation, most established games (excluding Wii's ability to play Gamecube games), and they're turning a profit on current consoles sold. Sony's machine costs $800 and putting pressure on them to lower a price point could hasten any future demise... if it's in the cards.

    My only stab at trying to understand is that Microsoft eventually wants to buy the Sony gaming division, but I'll be the first to suggest that's an outrageous claim. Hmmm...
    • Re:Prices by GeckoX (Score:2) Wednesday March 28 2007, @03:31PM
      • Re:Prices by Applekid (Score:2) Wednesday March 28 2007, @03:50PM
        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:Prices by Itchyeyes (Score:2) Wednesday March 28 2007, @04:23PM
    • Re:Prices by tkrotchko (Score:2) Wednesday March 28 2007, @08:45PM
    • Re:Prices by DrXym (Score:2) Thursday March 29 2007, @05:36AM
  • I have both a 20GB 360 and a 60GB PS3. When I compare price vs. features between both units, it's now starting to look like the PS3 wins out. Especially if one believes that Blu-Ray is going to win the HD format war. MS has made a pricing mistake, and I think the market will give them a good thrashing as a result.
  • by CaseM (746707) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @03:21PM (#18519873)
    Upgrading to the Elite is problematic for me, even if I were so inclined, because my wife likes to play the XBLA games on her own account and I don't want to rebuy them all. Has Microsoft anticipated this and will they make games fully authorized after I upgrade? I don't want to be forced to connect to XBL and under my account just to play my XBL games. If they want me to consider upgrading then they should plan to offer assistance to people in my situation. I'll warrant there are plenty of people like me out there.
  • It appears to me that..... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Chazmyrr (145612) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @03:22PM (#18519885)
    someone at Microsoft is smoking crack. They get the edge over Sony and then they step on their crank with this crap.

    The pricing virtually eliminates premium sales. No one is going to pay $400 for the premium w/ 20GB instead of $480 for the elite w/ 120GB when the 120GB drive is sold separately for $200. Now there's actually a choice for the consumer at the $500 price point. Do I buy the 360 with the larger hard drive or buy the 20GB PS3 and have a Blu-Ray player?

    Leave it to Microsoft to make the $600 PS3 look like a good deal. $480 + $100 WiFi + $200 HD-DVD = $780.
  • Does it really matter? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by FrozenFOXX (1048276) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @04:00PM (#18520423)
    I think that most people are missing the point. For the general population who's interested in obtaining a game system who cares? The comparing value versus price between PS3 and 360 is only valid if you're looking at doing everything BUT gaming.

    I mean really, you can tell me for instance that the PS3 will do everything from clean my laundry to wash my car but at the end of the day it doesn't have my Gears of War. It doesn't have my Crackdown. There's no Forza Motorsport. There's no XBLA. To top it off it's also a lot cheaper for me to get to play a large library (and ever-growing...just check out upcoming releases like The Darkness, Bioshock, and others) of great games that look spectacular with a superb online system. Can I play Blu-Ray movies? No, but then, did I really want to buy a game system to play movies?

    It's part of the same reason the Wii is selling. It's cheap, it plays good games, and nobody gives a fuck if it can't wipe your butt for you, too. So what does this new 360 do? Who does it cater to? People that feel they have to have the "extra shiny" version of a console to feel superior to other people. The other people are those interested in the Marketplace for downloading things which means there isn't a value comparison with the PS3 since the PS3 doesn't have access to the Marketplace...the very source of content the interested users wanted in the first place. The rest of us just get the Premium and rock on because it lets us play our games which is what WE wanted in the first place.

    There will be a true features/price comparison between the 360 and PS3 when the PS3 has a large library of awesome games (and for the cross-platform ones like DMC4, VF5, and others it's going to need to be worth coughing up several hundred dollars for a better experience or we're still going to get them on the cheaper system that gives the same or better experience) that make it worthwhile to have for playing games.

    Anyone seriously interested in a media server has probably already gotten an Apple product or some other personal computer solution since they tend to be better at it overall. This is all for show and to cater to an elitist (though not necessarily "elite") portion of the interested 360 population, not to the rest of us who buy game systems for playing games.
  • by metarox (883747) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @04:06PM (#18520473)
    (http://thedailywtf.com/)
    Hell, I'd release one with a dual drive able to read both formats and be done with it!
  • by Xest (935314) * on Wednesday March 28 2007, @04:17PM (#18520637)
    MS wants to get the new iteration of their 360 hardware out the door that is, the cooler, quieter and cheaper to produce iteration.

    Whilst cheaper to produce however, MS will still initially make a loss until they're shipping en-masse. Therefore, I'd say MS is releasing the elite with the new hardware iteration as a method to ship said new hardware without taking as high a monetary loss. Essentially, what this means is that they're using the elite as a tool to bring down cost of production of the new hardware iteration, so that 6months down the line, they can start building the premium version with the new hardware so cheap that they can announce a massive price drop on the core and premium.

    Whilst the Elite may indeed look like an idiotic short term decision, if this is their plan then by the end of the year you could see MS shifting the 360 perhaps even as cheap as the Wii is currently. This is something Sony wont be able to compete with any time soon, they've already shafted backwards compatibility in the name of reducing production costs for the European release of the PS3, by xmas 2007 year I'd be suprised if the PS3 had dropped at all, but again, I bet the 360 is selling for current Wii prices. As an aside, I'd guess the Wii will be cheaper again by then, Nintendo is shifting so many units and never made a loss per-unit in the first place so a price cut would be an easy hit for them by xmas 2007.

    I don't know US prices off by heart, but my prediction for xmas 2007 console prices in the UK is something like:
    Wii - £149.99
    360 Core - £169.99 (or possibly even written off altogether)
    360 Premium - £199.99
    PS3 60gb - £399.99
  • by JustNiz (692889) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @05:27PM (#18521601)
    like this one that presumes everyone already knows what its about just because its apparently a microsoft product?
    Its just like presuming that all computer software runs under MS windows.
    I have no clue what an elite is even after reading the post.
    • I second that by ari_j (Score:2) Wednesday March 28 2007, @06:00PM
    • We should by Lieutenant_Dan (Score:1) Wednesday March 28 2007, @07:12PM
  • HD DVD still alive (Score:2)

    by Rdickinson (160810) on Wednesday March 28 2007, @07:51PM (#18523179)
    They just cant include it because no drive does 12 speed DVD and therefore doesnt meet the spec for 360 games.

    MS can easily supply a BR drive too, but believe that HD DVD is better for the consumer, ultimatly it'll be digital online delivery anyhow and media will become a thing of the past.

    Saying that I dont see the Elite offering good value for money unless your desprate for HDMI & love HDCP.
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